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#91
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On Apr 25, 1:11 am, "J.D. Walker" wrote:
On second thought, the Swiss system has an inherent defect of inequitable distribution of colors. A system which attempts to balance the first move advantage of White through a scoring edge for Black should help to correct this Swiss system problem. Or... we could only have Swiss tourneys with an *even* number of rounds, so that everybody gets the same number of Whites and Blacks. -- help bot |
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#92
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On Apr 25, 10:20 am, " wrote:
Snipped long-winded, sloppy story. Poor Mr. Parr hates it when those ugly facts interfere with the Evans propaganda! The stories posted here by Evans ratpacker Larry Parr always seem to goof on some key details. For instance, the long-winded attempt to play back the history of the world championship left out parts where Gary Kasparov -- a favorite of the ratpackers -- failed, such as his GMA and PCA debacles. Mr. Parr also "forgot to mention" that GK's handling of his private world title had selected GM Shirov as challenger, but instead of, say, giving GK a rematch clause, Mr. Shirov was simply cheated out of his shot at the title altogether! As horrible a job as FIDE has done, it seems that there will always be a few who can still "out-do" the hacks at their own game. It reminds me of what went on before FIDE took over, of the ducking and conniving of just about every world champ whose name was not Wilhelm Steinitz. In many cases, the result of the champions having free reign was that the most worthy contenders were not even able to get a foot in the door. Instead of arguing that Gary Kasparov was a champion of "justice", perhaps Larry Evans should take a good, hard look at what justice is-- like he did when Bobby Fischer was barking "demands" at FIDE. -- help bot |
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#93
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GREG KENNEDY STRIKES OUT AGAIN
Or... we could only have Swiss tourneys with an *even* number of rounds, so that everybody gets the same number of Whites and Blacks. -- help bot David Kane falsely claimed the rematch clause is no advantage to the champion. But here is what Mikhail Tal wrote after losing the title back to Mikhail Botvinnik, who exercised the clause in 1961: "I often have to answer a ticklish question: what do you think of return matches? As it happened the honour of 'closing this page of the FIDE' fell to my lot. What would it have cost the International Chess Federation to take the decision to abolish return matches a year earlier?!" Now Greg overlooks that an even number of rounds in a Swiss does NOT mean equal colors for everyone. If two leaders both have 3 whites and 2 blacks going into the last round of a six-round Swiss, one of them will end up with 4 whites and 2 blacks. And so it goes. help bot wrote: On Apr 25, 1:11 am, "J.D. Walker" wrote: On second thought, the Swiss system has an inherent defect of inequitable distribution of colors. A system which attempts to balance the first move advantage of White through a scoring edge for Black should help to correct this Swiss system problem. Or... we could only have Swiss tourneys with an *even* number of rounds, so that everybody gets the same number of Whites and Blacks. -- help bot |
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#94
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I AGREE WITH GREG BUT....
For instance, the long-winded attempt to play back the history of the world championship left out parts where Gary Kasparov -- a favorite of the ratpackers -- failed, such as his GMA and PCA debacles. Mr. Parr also "forgot to mention" that GK's handling of his private world title had selected GM Shirov as challenger, but instead of, say, giving GK a rematch clause, Mr. Shirov was simply cheated out of his shot at the title altogether! -- Greg Kennedy I criticized Kasparov at the time. And GM Evans was also sharply critical of Kasparov in his Chess Life when replying to Owen Williams {K's manager). But the fact of the matter is that nobody offered to put up a decent purse for that match because of Kasparov's lopsided record of wins against Shirov in the past. The outcome was deemed to be a foregone conclusion. help bot wrote: On Apr 25, 10:20 am, " wrote: Snipped long-winded, sloppy story. Poor Mr. Parr hates it when those ugly facts interfere with the Evans propaganda! The stories posted here by Evans ratpacker Larry Parr always seem to goof on some key details. For instance, the long-winded attempt to play back the history of the world championship left out parts where Gary Kasparov -- a favorite of the ratpackers -- failed, such as his GMA and PCA debacles. Mr. Parr also "forgot to mention" that GK's handling of his private world title had selected GM Shirov as challenger, but instead of, say, giving GK a rematch clause, Mr. Shirov was simply cheated out of his shot at the title altogether! As horrible a job as FIDE has done, it seems that there will always be a few who can still "out-do" the hacks at their own game. It reminds me of what went on before FIDE took over, of the ducking and conniving of just about every world champ whose name was not Wilhelm Steinitz. In many cases, the result of the champions having free reign was that the most worthy contenders were not even able to get a foot in the door. Instead of arguing that Gary Kasparov was a champion of "justice", perhaps Larry Evans should take a good, hard look at what justice is-- like he did when Bobby Fischer was barking "demands" at FIDE. -- help bot |
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#95
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On Apr 26, 2:08 pm, " wrote:
David Kane falsely claimed the rematch clause is no advantage to the champion. Quote him, then. What's that-- you haven't got a quote of DK saying that? Hmmm. But here is what Mikhail Tal wrote after losing the title back to Mikhail Botvinnik, who exercised the clause in 1961: "I often have to answer a ticklish question: what do you think of return matches? As it happened the honour of 'closing this page of the FIDE' fell to my lot. What would it have cost the International Chess Federation to take the decision to abolish return matches a year earlier?!" Now Greg overlooks that an even number of rounds in a Swiss does NOT mean equal colors for everyone. If two leaders both have 3 whites and 2 blacks going into the last round of a six-round Swiss, one of them will end up with 4 whites and 2 blacks. Interesting. Of course, nearly every Swiss tournament I have played in had fewer than six rounds. The main problem is with the weekend Swiss of five rounds (that's three on Saturday, and two on Sunday), where at the end, the winner may have had an extra White and the losers might complain of having been jilted. Now that pairings are done by computer, the cases in which somebody gets too many Blacks cannot so easily be blamed on the tournament director or on favoritism. I think players who have had a bye or who are in the lower portion of the scoring table will be the most likely victims here. Folks who have a perfect score tend to get their due colors (unless they've changed the rules, again). But let's talk about Mikhail Tal's issues for a moment. We know that in addition to the rematch he lost to GM Botvinnik, he was also subjected to the special rule which restricted the number of qualifiers from "any one country" (obviously meaning the USSR); that rule was passed due to complaints regarding potential collusion in the candidates tournament format-- complaints by Bobby Fischer (which incidentally, wrongly implicated Victor Kortchnoi as a cheater who purportedly "threw" his games to keep BF from winning). Obviously, when politics enter the fray, fairness goes out the window. I am flatly against having a rematch clause. If one cycle every three years is not good enough, then they can change the cycle to make it "fit" in less time. The champion should have no advantage whatsoever, or, if that is not possible, then his advantage should be limited to not having to qualify (again) and play in the preliminary events, to show he is good enough to be a "real contender". I don't know which hurt Mikhail Tal more-- the rematch clause, the special rule or losing a kidney. But the real problem seems to be that the talking heads in the chess press can't stand it when there are a multitude of near-equals in contention for the title; they respond by selecting one favorite, and then attacking everybody else. Or the other way around-- they select one player to play the villain, and everybody else is written into the script as the good guys. LOL! Larry Evans' approach has consistently been to cast Gary Kasparov as a good guy, but this choice was not well thought-out (consider his blatant cheating, and his ever-changing lies). And one of the most obvious problems with casting Mr. Botvinnik as villain, is that he consistently defeated those players who were beyond the reach of evil Soviet henchmen who were cast in the roles of manipulators. For instance, when the script calls for super-Soviet players to "throw" their games, we are not supposed to notice that at the very same time, western super-stars are also losing to MB, simply being *outplayed* on the chess board. Not to pick on Larry Evans, mind you; I notice this same type of flaw in many, many movie and TV scripts. It seems that the one thing all these story writers have in common is, unsurprisingly, creativity; and for whatever reason, creativity and logical thinking just do not go hand-in-hand. -- help bot |
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#96
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FIND THE QUOTE YOURSELF
It's in this very thread. David Kane falsely claimed the rematch clause is no advantage to the champion. Quote him, then. What's that-- you haven't got a quote of DK saying that? Hmmm. help bot wrote: On Apr 26, 2:08 pm, " wrote: David Kane falsely claimed the rematch clause is no advantage to the champion. Quote him, then. What's that-- you haven't got a quote of DK saying that? Hmmm. But here is what Mikhail Tal wrote after losing the title back to Mikhail Botvinnik, who exercised the clause in 1961: "I often have to answer a ticklish question: what do you think of return matches? As it happened the honour of 'closing this page of the FIDE' fell to my lot. What would it have cost the International Chess Federation to take the decision to abolish return matches a year earlier?!" Now Greg overlooks that an even number of rounds in a Swiss does NOT mean equal colors for everyone. If two leaders both have 3 whites and 2 blacks going into the last round of a six-round Swiss, one of them will end up with 4 whites and 2 blacks. Interesting. Of course, nearly every Swiss tournament I have played in had fewer than six rounds. The main problem is with the weekend Swiss of five rounds (that's three on Saturday, and two on Sunday), where at the end, the winner may have had an extra White and the losers might complain of having been jilted. Now that pairings are done by computer, the cases in which somebody gets too many Blacks cannot so easily be blamed on the tournament director or on favoritism. I think players who have had a bye or who are in the lower portion of the scoring table will be the most likely victims here. Folks who have a perfect score tend to get their due colors (unless they've changed the rules, again). But let's talk about Mikhail Tal's issues for a moment. We know that in addition to the rematch he lost to GM Botvinnik, he was also subjected to the special rule which restricted the number of qualifiers from "any one country" (obviously meaning the USSR); that rule was passed due to complaints regarding potential collusion in the candidates tournament format-- complaints by Bobby Fischer (which incidentally, wrongly implicated Victor Kortchnoi as a cheater who purportedly "threw" his games to keep BF from winning). Obviously, when politics enter the fray, fairness goes out the window. I am flatly against having a rematch clause. If one cycle every three years is not good enough, then they can change the cycle to make it "fit" in less time. The champion should have no advantage whatsoever, or, if that is not possible, then his advantage should be limited to not having to qualify (again) and play in the preliminary events, to show he is good enough to be a "real contender". I don't know which hurt Mikhail Tal more-- the rematch clause, the special rule or losing a kidney. But the real problem seems to be that the talking heads in the chess press can't stand it when there are a multitude of near-equals in contention for the title; they respond by selecting one favorite, and then attacking everybody else. Or the other way around-- they select one player to play the villain, and everybody else is written into the script as the good guys. LOL! Larry Evans' approach has consistently been to cast Gary Kasparov as a good guy, but this choice was not well thought-out (consider his blatant cheating, and his ever-changing lies). And one of the most obvious problems with casting Mr. Botvinnik as villain, is that he consistently defeated those players who were beyond the reach of evil Soviet henchmen who were cast in the roles of manipulators. For instance, when the script calls for super-Soviet players to "throw" their games, we are not supposed to notice that at the very same time, western super-stars are also losing to MB, simply being *outplayed* on the chess board. Not to pick on Larry Evans, mind you; I notice this same type of flaw in many, many movie and TV scripts. It seems that the one thing all these story writers have in common is, unsurprisingly, creativity; and for whatever reason, creativity and logical thinking just do not go hand-in-hand. -- help bot |
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#97
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wrote in message ... GREG KENNEDY STRIKES OUT AGAIN Or... we could only have Swiss tourneys with an *even* number of rounds, so that everybody gets the same number of Whites and Blacks. -- help bot David Kane falsely claimed the rematch clause is no advantage to the champion. I said that it is not an advantage in the title defense itself. Even though I am no great fan of the rematch clause, it is akin to the practice of seeding the defeated champion in the Candidates cycle. The point was that there is no way to *mathematically* compare that advantage with an actual advantage in the match. I would rather go on vacation to Hawaii than paint my kitchen, but it cannot be characterized as a "mathematical" comparison. I'm sure Parr is one of those with absolutely no understanding of mathematics. And he is all too willing to ramble on about topics which he does not understand. |
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#98
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On Apr 25, 10:13 am, Rich Hutnik wrote:
Bid for time? Do you mean set the clock at 6 minutes, and players bid less to decide what side they would play? This way they players who bids less time would pick the side (let's presume white here). Not sure bidding more time is the right answer here. I'm not sure how that was intended to work, either. I know that in Go, it has been suggested that players bid for komi in order to get black - that is, the player who offers to score the most points over the other player to win, if he gets the first move, does get the first move. A bit like Contract Bridge. I suppose the player gets White who offers the largest time advantage to his opponent... John Savard |
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#99
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"Quadibloc" wrote in message ... On Apr 25, 10:13 am, Rich Hutnik wrote: Bid for time? Do you mean set the clock at 6 minutes, and players bid less to decide what side they would play? This way they players who bids less time would pick the side (let's presume white here). Not sure bidding more time is the right answer here. I'm not sure how that was intended to work, either. I know that in Go, it has been suggested that players bid for komi in order to get black - that is, the player who offers to score the most points over the other player to win, if he gets the first move, does get the first move. A bit like Contract Bridge. I suppose the player gets White who offers the largest time advantage to his opponent... John Savard What I meant was that the player who agrees to play with the least time gets the first White. |
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#100
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"David Kane" schrieb im Newsbeitrag . .. wrote in message ... GREG KENNEDY STRIKES OUT AGAIN Or... we could only have Swiss tourneys with an *even* number of rounds, so that everybody gets the same number of Whites and Blacks. -- help bot David Kane falsely claimed the rematch clause is no advantage to the champion. I said that it is not an advantage in the title defense itself. Even though I am no great fan of the rematch clause, it is akin to the practice of seeding the defeated champion in the Candidates cycle. The point was that there is no way to *mathematically* compare that advantage with an actual advantage in the match. Why not? If challenger and champion have the same chance of winning a 24-game match then the champion will retain the title 75% of the time, winning either the match or the rematch. If the odds are 7-3 against the champion the odds are even that he will win either match or rematch. In other words: the advantage is enormous. I would rather go on vacation to Hawaii than paint my kitchen, but it cannot be characterized as a "mathematical" comparison. I'm sure Parr is one of those with absolutely no understanding of mathematics. And he is all too willing to ramble on about topics which he does not understand. You think Parr are rambling when they are actually reporting on their historical research. They are now, very likely, working on the important question of what would have become of Europe had the Siege of Vienna succeeded in 1529. Suleiman the Magnificent would then have become Sultan of the Occident and, obviously, the World Trade Center would still be standing. |
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